PR2326.O5 S47 1664
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Sir Thomas Overbury his wife with additions of new characters and many other witty conceits never before printed. |
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PR2326.O5 S57
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The illustrious wife: viz. that excellent poem, Sir Thomas Overburie's wife illustrated by Giles Oldisworth, nephew to the same Sir T.O. |
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PR2326.O5 S57 1616
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Sir Thomas Ouerburie his wife with new elegies vpon his (now knowne) vntimely death : whereunto are annexed, new newes and characters / |
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PR2326.O5 S57 1664
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Sir Thomas Overbury his wife with additions of new characters, and many other witty conceits never before printed. |
2 |
PR2326.O5 Z9
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Cast of ravens : the strange case of Sir Thomas Overbury. |
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PR2326.O5 Z9 1965
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Cast of ravens : the strange case of Sir Thomas Overbury / |
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PR2326 .O8 1921
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The poems of Edward De Vere : seventeenth earl of Oxford (Shakespeare ed.) / |
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PR2326.O8 Z6
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Oxford and his Elizabethan ladies. |
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PR2326.O8 Z8
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Shakespeare sonnets and Edward De Vere / |
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PR2326.O8 Z8 1930
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Shakespeare sonnets and Edward De Vere / |
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PR2327 .A1 1929
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The palace of pleasure / |
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PR2327.A4 H3
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An Elizabethan story-book : famous tales from the Palace of pleasure / |
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PR2327 .C52 1623
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[Chaucer newly painted] |
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PR2327 (INTERNET)
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[Chaucer newly painted] |
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PR2327.P3 (INTERNET)
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The palace of pleasure beautified, adorned and well furnished, with pleasaunt histories and excellent nouelles, selected out of diuers good and commendable authors. / |
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PR2328.P12 M37 1625
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The married-womans case, or, Good counsell to mayds, to be carefull of hastie marriage by the example of other married-women : to the tune of The married-mans case / |
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PR2329.P125 E4 1988
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The emblems of Thomas Palmer : two hundred poosees, Sloane MS 3794 / |
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PR2329.P128 C66 1627
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The cooper of Norfolke, or, A pretty jest of a brewer and the coopers wife and how the cooper served the brewer in his kinde : to the tune of The wiving age. |
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PR2329.P128 (INTERNET)
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Come worldling see what paines I here do take to gather gold while here on earth I rake. What the father gathereth by the rake, the sonne doth scatter with the forke. |
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PR2329.P128 K66 1640
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The King, and a poore northerne man. Shewing how a poor Northumberlan[d] man, a tenant to the King, being wronged by a lawyer, (his neighbour) went to the King himself to make knowne his grievances, full of simple mirth and merry plaine jests. |
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